Indian prime minister appeals for calm

Date: December 24 2012

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has appealed for calm after violent protests sparked by the rape of a 23-year-old woman on a bus.

At least 68 protesters and 78 policemen were injured in Sunday's clashes as the police tried to evict the demonstrators from a high-security area of the capital, New Delhi. One policeman was reported to be in critical condition.

A dozen state buses and police vans were damaged as some of the protesters turned violent, breaking barricades and throwing stones.

Police fired tear gas and forcibly dispersed the crowd from the site near government offices and the presidential palace.

The woman, a physiotherapy student, was gang-raped on a moving bus and beaten unconscious before the attackers threw her and her male companion from the vehicle near New Delhi's airport on December 16.

The attackers, who were drunk, had stolen the bus. All the suspects have been arrested.

The woman is in critical condition on a ventilator, according to doctors.

"Anger at this crime is justified, but violence will serve no purpose," Singh said on Monday. "I appeal to all concerned citizens to maintain peace and calm."

Singh promised a speedy response to the "terrible crime" and said the government was examining measures to protect the safety of women and children.

Most of the thousands of protesters in the streets of the capital and several other cities were young people demanding swift action against rapists and safety for women.

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